• Brades & Co No 1773 ball-peen 1/2lb hammer with wooden handle 9 1/2 inches in length. Made in England, William Hunt and Sons vintage machinist and engineer hammer and collectible striking hand tool
  • Brades & Co No 1773 ball-peen 1/2lb hammer with wooden handle 9 1/2 inches in length. Made in England, William Hunt and Sons vintage machinist and engineer hammer and collectible striking hand tool
  • Brades & Co No 1773 ball-peen 1/2lb hammer with wooden handle 9 1/2 inches in length. Made in England, William Hunt and Sons vintage machinist and engineer hammer and collectible striking hand tool
  • Brades & Co No 1773 ball-peen 1/2lb hammer with wooden handle 9 1/2 inches in length. Made in England, William Hunt and Sons vintage machinist and engineer hammer and collectible striking hand tool
  • Brades & Co No 1773 ball-peen 1/2lb hammer with wooden handle 9 1/2 inches in length. Made in England, William Hunt and Sons vintage machinist and engineer hammer and collectible striking hand tool

Mid Century Brades & Co No 1773 Ball Pein Hammer England

$33.00

In stock

SKU: 202401040001 Category:

Description

Beautiful vintage Brades & Co No 1773 ball-peen 1/2lb hammer with wooden handle 9 1/2 inches in length. Made in England, William Hunt and Sons vintage machinist and engineer hammer and collectible striking hand tool.

Brand

William Hunt and Sons

William Hunt and Sons or WHS is a British brand of masonry tools and other types of edge tools. The WHS 4" pointing trowel is well known as a standard excavation implement in British archaeology The founder of the company, William Hunt, was an edge tool maker at Rowley Regis, near Dudley, Worcestershire, in the late 18th century. In 1782 he purchased the Brades Estate at Oldbury, near Birmingham, and established a new works there known as Brades Forge, or simply as The Brades. By 1805 they were also manufacturing steel on the site, which was now known as the Brades Steel Works. Around 1793, Hunt took W. Cliffe into partnership, and for a short period the firm was known as Hunt and Cliffe: this name appears in the company's first ledger, dated 9 May 1794. This partnership dissolved around 1803, and Hunt continued trading on his own account until 1809, when he took his sons into partnership and the firm became known as William Hunt & Sons. More info at https://madeinoldbury.co.uk/articles/brades-works/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Hunt_and_Sons http://trowelcollector.blogspot.com/2016/02/the-bst-group-brades-skelton-tyzack.html